The Human Body: An Orientation - An-Najah Staff · 2015-08-29 · The Human Body : An Orientation...

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The Human Body: An Orientation Prepared by Dr. Naim Kittana Dr. Suhaib Hattab Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences An-Najah National University 1

Transcript of The Human Body: An Orientation - An-Najah Staff · 2015-08-29 · The Human Body : An Orientation...

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The Human Body: An Orientation

Prepared by

Dr. Naim Kittana

Dr. Suhaib Hattab

Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences

An-Najah National University 1

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Declaration

• The content and the figures of this seminar were directly adopted from the text book “Human Anatomy and Physiology / Ninth edition/ Eliane N. Marieb2013”

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Performance Objectives

• Define Anatomy and Physiology

• Describe the relationship between structure and function

• Define basic directional terms

• Describe the anatomical position

• Describe the major cavities of the body

• Describe the levels of organization of the body and give major characteristics of each level

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Performance Objectives

• List the organ systems

• Define homeostasis and explain why it is important

• Describe the negative-feedback system and the positive-feedback system and their relationship to homeostasis

• Name and describe the three major planes of the body or organ.

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The Human Body : An Orientation

• Anatomy: Study of the structure and shape of the body and its parts andtheir relationships to one another

• Physiology : Study of how the body and its parts work or function.

• Subdivisions of physiology:

Neurophysiology: explains the workings of nervous system

Cardiac Physiology : Study the function of the Heart

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Anatomy : Levels of Study

• Gross Anatomy

- Large structures- Easily observable

• Microscopic Anatomy

- Very small structures- Can only be viewed with a microscope

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Organ System Overview

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Organ System Overview

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Organ System Overview

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Organ System Overview

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Organ System Overview

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Organ System Overview

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Necessary Life Functions

1- Maintain Boundaries

• Every living organism must maintain its boundaries so that its internal environment

remains distinct from the external environment surrounding it.

• All the cells of our body are surrounded by a selectively permeable membrane.

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Necessary Life Functions

• The body as a whole is enclosed and protected by the integumentary system (skin)

• Why skin is so important? it protects our internal organs from:

Drying out

Pathogens

The damaging effects of heat and sunlight,

The damaging effects of the numerous number of chemicals in the external

environment.

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Necessary Life Functions

2- Movement

• Locomotion : by Muscular system , and the skeletal system provides the bony

framework that the muscles pull on as they work

• Movement of substances such as blood, foodstuffs, and urine are propelled through

internal organs of the cardiovascular, digestive, and urinary systems, respectively.

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Necessary Life Functions

3- Responsiveness

• Responsiveness, or excitability is the ability to sense changes (which serve as stimuli)

in the environment and then respond to them

• E.g. When CO2 in your blood rises to dangerously high levels, chemical sensors

respond by sending messages to brain centers controlling respiration, and you

breathe faster.

• Because nerve cells are highly excitable and communicate rapidly with each other via

electrical impulses, the nervous system is most involved with responsiveness .

• Generally, all body cells are excitable to some extent.

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Necessary Life Functions

4- Digestion

• Is the breaking down of ingested foodstuffs to simple molecules that can be

absorbed into the blood.

• The nutrient-rich blood is then distributed to all body cells by the

cardiovascular System.

5- Metabolism : chemical reactions within the body

• Production of energy

• Making body structures

• Facilitate elimination

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Necessary Life Functions

6-Excretion

• Elimination of waste from metabolic reactions, e.g. Digestive system

eliminate undigested material (feces), and the urinary system eliminate

nitrogen containing metabolic wastes in urine.

7- Reproduction : Production of future generation

8- Growth: Increasing of cell size and number

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1- Nutrients

• Chemicals for energy and cell building

• Includes: carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, vitamins, and minerals

2- Oxygen: Required for chemical reactions

3- Water: 60–80% of body weight Provides a medium for metabolic reaction

Survival Needs

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4- Temperature: Stable body temperature (for Enzymes that catalyze chemical

reaction)

5- Atmospheric pressure: Breathing and gas exchange in the lungs depend on

appropriate atmospheric pressure

Survival Needs

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Homeostasis

• Hemeostasis: describe its ability to maintain relatively stable internal

conditions even though the outside world changes continuously.

• Although the literal translation of homeostasis is “unchanging,” the term

does not really mean a static, or unchanging, state.

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Homeostasis

• Rather, it indicates a dynamic state of equilibrium, or a balance, in which

internal conditions vary, but always within relatively narrow limits,

e.g. body temperature

• Homeostatic imbalance : a disturbance in homeostasis resulting in disease

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Homeostasis Control

• Communication within the body is essential for homeostasis.

• Communication is accomplished chiefly by the nervous and endocrine systems,

which use neural electrical impulses or blood borne hormones, respectively, as

information carriers

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Decreased room temperature

causes increased heat loss from the

body, which leads to a decrease in

body temperature, etc.)

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Interactions among the elements of a homeostatic control system maintain stable internal conditions

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Components of homeostatic control mechanism

1- The receptor:

• is some type of sensor that monitors the environment and responds to

changes, called stimuli, by sending information (input) to the second

component, the control center. Input flows from the receptor to the control

center along the so-called afferent pathway.

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Components of homeostatic control mechanism

2- The control center:

• Determines the set point, which is the level or range at which a variable is

to be maintained.

• It also analyzes the input it receives and determines the appropriate

response or course of action.

• Information (output) then flows from the control center to the third

component, the effector, along the efferent pathway.

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Components of homeostatic control mechanism

3- The effector:

• Provides the means for the control center’s response (output) to the

stimulus.

• The results of the response then feed back to influence the effect of the

stimulus, either reducing it (in negative feedback) so that the whole control

process is shut off, or enhancing it (in positive feedback) so that the whole

process continues at an even faster rate

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Afferent and efferent pathways in temperature homeostasis.31

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Negative feedback system

• In which an increase or decrease in the variable being regulated brings about responses

that tend to move the variable in the direction opposite (“negative” to) the direction of

the original change.

• Negative feedback may occur at the organ, cellular, or molecular level, and it is not

unique to hormonal pathways.

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Example on negative feedback system

The production of energy within cells:

• When energy is needed by a cell, glucose molecules are converted into a anenergy carrying molecule denosine triphosphate (ATP).

• ATP accumululation in the cell inhibits the activity of some of the enzymesinvolved in the chemical conversion of glucose to ATP.

• Thus, as ATP levels increase within a cell, further production of ATP is sloweddown.

• Conversely, when ATP levels drop within a cell, negative feedback is releasedand more glucose is consumed to make new ATP.

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Positive feedback system

• It accelerates a process, leading to an “explosive” system ( move the variable in

the same direction (“positive” to) of the original change

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Example on positive feedback system

• When a brain cell is stimulated, pore-like channels on the surface of the cellare opened.

• These channels permit the entry of extracellular sodium ions into the cellinterior, carrying their positive charges .

• Positive charges inside brain cells cause the opening of more sodiumchannels.

• This leads to more sodium influx, more channel openings, and so on (positivefeedback).

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Example on positive feedback system

• The result is a brain cell with altered electrical properties due to the change in

the concentration of charged sodium ions across its surface.

• For this process to stop and be reversed, energy must be used by the cell to

restore the sodium ions to their original concentrations inside and out side the

cell.

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The Language of Anatomy

• Special terminology is used to prevent misunderstanding

• Exact terms are used for:

• Position

• Direction

• Regions

• Structures

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Body Landmarks

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Body Planes and Sections

• For anatomical studies, the body is often cut, or sectioned, along a flat surface

called a plane.

• The most frequently used body planes are sagittal, frontal, and transverse

planes, A section is named for the plane along which it is cut.

• Thus, a cut along a sagittal plane produces a sagittal section.

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Body Planes and Sections

1- A sagittal plane :

• It is a vertical plane that divides the body into right

and left parts.

• A sagittal plane that lies exactly in the midline is the

median plane, or midsagittal plane.

• All other sagittal planes, offset from the midline, are

parasagittal planes.

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Body Planes and Sections

2- Frontal planes:

• like sagittal planes, lie vertically.

• Frontal planes, however, divide the body into anterior

and posterior parts.

• A frontal plane is also called a coronal plane

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Body Planes and Sections

3- Transverse (horizontal) planes:

• A plane runs horizontally from right to left, dividing the body into superior and inferior parts

• Many different transverse planes exist at every possible level from head to foot.

• A transverse section is also called a cross section

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Body Planes and Sections

4- Oblique sections:

• are cuts made diagonally between

the horizontal and the vertical

planes.

• Because oblique sections are often

confusing and difficult to interpret,

they are seldom used.

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Body Planes

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Body cavities

• They are two sets of internal body cavities

called the dorsal and ventral body cavities.

• These cavities are closed to the outside and

provide different degrees of protection to

the organs contained within them.

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Body cavities

1- Dorsal Body Cavity:

• Protects the fragile nervous system

organs.

• It has two subdivisions, the cranial

cavity, in the skull, encases the brain,

the vertebral, or spinal, cavity, which

runs within the bony vertebral

column, encloses the delicate spinal

cord.

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Body cavities

2- Ventral Body Cavity :

• The more anterior and larger of the

closed body cavities

• Like the dorsal cavity, it has two major

subdivisions, the thoracic cavity and

the abdominopelvic cavity.

• The ventral body cavity houses internal

organs collectively called the viscera or

visceral organs.

• The superior subdivision, the thoracic

cavity is surrounded by the ribs and

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Body cavities

• The thoracic cavity is further subdivided into lateral pleural cavities, each

enveloping a lung, and the medial mediastinum.

• The mediastinum contains the pericardial, which encloses the heart, and it also

surrounds the remaining thoracic organs (esophagus, trachea, and others).

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Body cavities

• The thoracic cavity is separated from the more inferior abdominopelvic cavity

by the diaphragm (a dome-shaped muscle important in breathing).

• The abdominopelvic cavity, has two parts:

₋ The superior portion, the abdominal cavity, contains the stomach,

intestines, spleen, liver, and other organs.

₋ The inferior part, the pelvic cavity, lies in the bony pelvis and contains the

urinary bladder, some reproductive organs, and the rectum

• These regions are not physically separated by a muscular or membrane wall.

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